What did @nicksiebecker actually say?
The creator shows a before-and-after comparison, credits GHK-Cu injections for the change, then pivots to selling a topical product. His core claim is that GHK-Cu works both injected and applied to skin as "a repairing peptide" that delivers "collagen boosting as well as tightening in the face." He also calls a specific TikTok Shop brand "reputable" and adds a scarcity push to buy before it "sells out."
That's a lot packed into 30 seconds. Some of it tracks with real science. Some of it is a sales pitch dressed up as personal testimony. The before-and-after framing is particularly worth scrutinizing, because we have no idea what else changed in his routine, diet, or lifestyle during that period.
Does the science back this up?
Partially, yes. GHK-Cu (glycyl-L-histidyl-L-lysine copper) has a legitimate and fairly robust research base for skin applications. The evidence for topical use is more solid than many peptides currently circulating on TikTok.
Pickart and Margolina (2018, Cosmetics) summarized decades of work showing GHK-Cu stimulates collagen and elastin synthesis, activates wound-healing pathways, and has antioxidant activity in skin tissue. A 2009 double-blind study by Finkley et al. (published in the Journal of Wound Care) found measurable improvements in skin laxity and thickness with topical GHK-Cu formulations. So "collagen boosting" is not a fantasy claim here. It has in vitro and some clinical support.
The injection claim is a different story. Systemic injectable GHK-Cu has been studied primarily in wound healing and tissue repair contexts, not cosmetic skin tightening. Extrapolating his injected results to topical results for a general audience is a stretch that the science does not cleanly support.
What did they get wrong (or right)?
He got the basic mechanism right. GHK-Cu does appear to influence collagen synthesis and has documented skin repair activity. Credit where it's due.
What he got wrong is more important. First, he conflated his injectable results with what a topical product will do for a viewer's face. These are not equivalent delivery methods. Bioavailability through skin is dramatically lower than systemic injection, and no rigorous head-to-head trial shows topical GHK-Cu produces the same results as injected GHK-Cu.
Second, his brand endorsement carries zero clinical weight. Calling Asterwood "reputable" because they sell on TikTok is not a quality standard. Topical peptide products are not regulated for efficacy by the FDA. Concentration, stability, and vehicle formulation all matter enormously for whether a copper peptide actually penetrates skin, and none of that is visible from a TikTok storefront.
Third, his before-and-after is uncontrolled anecdote. No timeline, no controls, no disclosure of other variables. This is how most skincare misinformation spreads.
What should you actually know?
GHK-Cu is one of the more scientifically interesting peptides in the cosmetic space, which makes it worth understanding accurately. Topical concentrations in studied formulations typically range from 1-4%, and the vehicle (the carrier formula) significantly affects whether the peptide remains stable and bioavailable on skin. Pickart's 2018 review notes GHK-Cu degrades quickly in the wrong pH environment.
If you're considering a topical product, look for brands that publish formulation details or have third-party testing. If you're considering injectable GHK-Cu, that is a clinical decision that belongs in a conversation with a licensed provider, not a TikTok comment section. Injectable peptides carry real risks including sterility concerns, dosing errors, and unknown long-term systemic effects that no 30-second video can responsibly address.
The scarcity tactic at the end is a marketing device, not medical information. "Get your hands on these before they sell out" has nothing to do with whether the product works.